The Prime of Miss Jean Brodie, novel by Muriel Spark, published in 1961 and adapted for the stage in 1966. The story of an eccentric Edinburgh teacher who inspires cultlike reverence in her young students, the novel was Spark’s best-known work. It explores themes of innocence, betrayal, and cold rationality opposed to unchecked emotionalism. The story of Miss Brodie’s ultimate downfall is told from the unsympathetic perspective of one of her students, though in the third person.